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Stop Foreclosures!
Want to
know how bankruptcy can help?
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FILING
BANKRUPTCY STOPS FORECLOSURE
We
stop foreclosures all the time. Let me repeat
that. We stop foreclosures all the time.
As
you know, foreclosure is what mortgage lenders
start when you get too far behind on the
mortgage you have on your home or other real
property.
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SAVE YOUR HOME!
I am behind on my payments.
What can filing bankruptcy do for me?
It may be able to save your home. The
big question is this: If you were up-to-date on your
mortgage now, could you keep up-to-date? If so,
filing bankruptcy...and specifically filing
bankruptcy under Chapter 13....could well save your
home or that other piece of real property.
You see.... immediately....when you file
a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, your mortgage lender must stop
any pending foreclosure. However...and this is
important... this assumes you file bankruptcy before the
foreclosure sale.
What do we mean by the foreclosure
sale?
You don't have forever. You
have to file bankruptcy while there is still
a foreclosure to stop. For instance, in
California, you are first served with a
Notice of Default that will indicate that
you have 90 days to get caught up on your
mortgage. If you do not, you will be served
with a notice of sale. That notice must be
served at least 21 days before the house is
sold in foreclosure. You may file your
chapter 13 bankruptcy any day prior to the
date of sale.
I don't live in California?
Does that make a difference?
Absolutely. How long you have to file
bankruptcy and still stop a foreclosure proceeding is a
matter of State law. That is, it all depends on the
foreclosure laws of your State.
How
do I find out for my State?
If your home or real property is in
foreclosure...even if there is a threat of
foreclosure...contact an experienced bankruptcy
attorney...and do it now. You have nothing to lose.
Most experienced bankruptcy attorneys offer a free
initial consultation. Don't wait. Call and set up an
appointment with a bankruptcy attorney. Whatever you
do...don't get advice from your mortgage lender.
What
happens after I file a Chapter 13 bankruptcy?
Assuming the plan is to save
your home or other real property, once the
case is filed, you start making your regular
mortgage payments again...as they come due.
You have to make them directly to the
mortgage lender.
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PAY
BACK OVERDUE MORTGAGE PAYMENTS
OVER TIME...IN LOW....EASY...PAYMENTS
What
happens to the mortgage payments I am behind
on?
Good question. In Chapter 13,
we set up a plan of repayment for you, and
one of the things you have to pay is all the
money that you are behind on with respect to
your mortgage. That's the bad news. The good
news is that you are generally given many
months to do so. For instance, in
California, in most cases, you can spread
this payment out over the first 36 months of
your Chapter 13 plan, which is anywhere from
36 to 60 months, depending upon your
circumstances.
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WHAT
IS FORECLOSURE?
Tell
me more about foreclosure. What exactly is
foreclosure?
If you will remember, way
back when you got your mortgage, you signed
2 documents. You probably signed a lot more
than 2 documents, but the 2 documents I am
speaking about were the Note and the
Mortgage (called a Deed of Trust in
California). The Note was your personal
promise to pay for the money you borrowed
from the mortgage lender. The Mortgage was
your agreement to serve up your home or
other real property as "collateral" for the
loan. By doing so, you allowed the mortgage
lender to put a lien on your real property.
"Foreclosure" is the legal proceeding
which your mortgage lender starts for the purpose of
selling your real property. The mortgage lender then
applies the money from the sale of your property toward
payment of your debt.
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UNDERSTANDING
HOW FORECLOSURE WORKS?
So,
how does foreclosure work?
Foreclosure is handled
somewhat differently from State to State,
but using California as an example, here is
how it works. When you get far enough
behind....usually about 3 months....on your
mortgage, to the point where your mortgage
lender has reason to believe that you either
can't or won't pay your mortgage, the
mortgage lender starts foreclosure.
However, before doing so, you may get one or
more demands for payment. If you are unable
to pay, you will be served with the Notice
of Default. The Notice of Default is
recorded at the County Recorders Office in
the County where the property is located.
Then, you have 90 days from the recording of
the Notice of Default to come current with
your mortgage. If you are unable to come
current, then the trustee handling the
foreclosure will posts and publishes a
Notice of Foreclosure Sale. A copy of the
Notice of Sale must be served on you,
and...in California...this gives you about
21 days advance notice of the sale.
The sale is then conducted in a public
place. Anyone interested in buying your property comes
to the sale and bids on your property. This highest
bidder gets your property. After the bidding is
concluded, the highest bidder must then pay....as a down
payment...a deposit in the amount of 10% of the bid
price.
The money received from the highest
bidder is first applied to pay any outstanding real
property taxes, and then it is applied toward payment of
your debt with the mortgage lender and...if there is
enough money....the costs involved in preserving the
property and processing the foreclosure.
After
my house is foreclosed, how long is it before
I have to move out?
We will use California law to answer
this question. In California....after the
foreclosure is complete, someone checks to see if
you are still living in the property. If you are
still there (and you have NOT filed bankruptcy), the
buyer of the property gets the Sheriff involved. The
Sheriff would then serve you with a "Notice to Quit"
the property, which requires you to vacate the
property within three many days. If you don't vacate
within that time, the Sheriff comes and physically
throws you out, along with your family and all your
belongings. You are literally put out on the street.
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DEALING
WITH THE MORTGAGE DEFICIENCY
Assuming
the foreclosure does not bring in enough money
to pay off my debt with the mortgage lender,
what happens to unpaid part?
Well...that's
where the Note comes in. Remember the Note
your signed at the closing. That Note....in
essence....pledged you as collateral for the
loan. Very simply....you still owe whatever
part of the debt is not paid through the sale
of your property. This is generally referred
to as a "mortgage deficiency". In
most cases, the mortgage lender will try to
collect upon this Note obligation by suing you
personally and taking a judgment against you.
How
much can I expect the unpaid part to be?
Every
foreclosure sale is different, but the harsh
reality is that a foreclosure sale almost
never brings anywhere near as much money as
when you sell your property through a licensed
real estate broker. As a result....we many
times see mortgage "deficiencies" of
$20,000 to $50,000 or more. How much the
deficiency is depends on what your real
property was worth, and how much value...if
any....there was in your property above what
was owed on your mortgages. For instance,
let's say your house was worth $170,000 in the
hands of a real estate broker, but only sold
for $120,000 at a foreclosure auction.
And...let's say you had 2 mortgages against
it, one for $140,000 (including your past-due
payments and the costs of foreclosure), and a
second mortgage for $30,000. In this example,
after foreclosure, you would still owe $20,000
on your first mortgage loan and $30,000 on
your second mortgage loan, for a total of
$50,000.
Can
filing bankruptcy help me get out from under
this mortgage "deficiency"?
Absolutely.
The bad new is that you owe it. The good news
is that this debt is "unsecured"
and...most of the time...by filing bankruptcy
you can get rid of most...if not all... of
this debt. In our example, that may mean
getting rid of $50,000 in debt...plus all the
future interest.
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DON'T
WAIT...GET THE HELP YOU NEED...NOW
When
should I come to see an attorney about filing
bankruptcy?
If your house is in
foreclosure or about to be....the answer is
now, immediately, today.
The sooner the better. The earlier
you are in the process of foreclosure or
threatened foreclosure: (1) the more options
you have, (2) the quicker you will find out
what your options are, (3) the less the
foreclosure expenses the mortgage lender
will have incurred and...in turn... the less
you will have to pay back, (4) the more time
there is to figure out if filing bankruptcy
is right for you, and if so, the more time
there will be for getting all the documents
properly prepared to effect your filing.
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BUY
MORE TIME IN YOUR HOME
I'm
still living in my house, but what if I can't
afford to keep up the payments? What can
filing bankruptcy do for me?
Sometimes, there just isn't
enough income to continue to afford your
home, as for instance where you have lost
your job or where you and your spouse have
split up.
In this event, filing bankruptcy before
the final foreclosure deadline can at least buy you more
time in your home. Filing bankruptcy is like throwing a
net over the mortgage lender. You see, when you file
bankruptcy, the Bankruptcy Court immediate issues a
court order that tells all creditors to stop in their
tracks until they are given permission by the court to
do otherwise. The net is this Court order, and what
happens is that your mortgage lender has to stop the
foreclosure....until it gets permission from the court
to continue. Even if the mortgage lender responds as
fast as possible, as long as the foreclosure was not
final at the time you filed bankruptcy, filing
bankruptcy may buy you an additional 30 days in your
home.
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BUY
MORE TIME TO GET YOUR HOUSE
SOLD THROUGH A REAL ESTATE BROKER
In addition, by filing
bankruptcy before the foreclosure sale, you
can stop the foreclosure, and if there is
enough value in your house to justify
selling it, you can buy some time to try to
get it sold through a real estate broker.
Remember, selling your house through a real
estate broker almost always brings more
money than having it sold at a foreclosure
auction. Filing Chapter 7 will buy you 1 or
more months.
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GETTING
RID OF CERTAIN 2ND OR 3RD MORTGAGES
How
else can filing bankruptcy help me with
respect to may house?
Sometimes...we can completely
strip off and get rid of a 2nd or 3rd
mortgage. Under the law, if your file
bankruptcy under Chapter 13, you have a
right to strip off any mortgage that is
completely "unsecured". For instance, say
your house is worth $100,000, but you owe
$110,000 on the first mortgage, and another
$30,000 on a second mortgage. By filing
bankruptcy under Chapter 13 (and this
assumes you stay in your case to
completion), you could...in this
example...strip off the second mortgage
completely. And...let's say your mortgage
payments on the second mortgage are $350 per
month. This would save you $350 per month.
This might be the difference between keeping
your house and making it, on the one hand,
or not filing and losing everything.
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WHAT
ABOUT REFINANCING TO AVOID FORECLOSURE?
I
am behind in my mortgage payments and the
foreclosure has already been started. Is it
too late to hire a mortgage broker to try to
refinance my house?
It probably is too late.
First off, in our experience, if your
situation is so far gone that you are
already in foreclosure, there is little
likelihood that a mortgage broker can help
you, and this assumes that the mortgage
broker isn't just leading you on to make a
few bucks at your expense. The biggest
problem is that every day you delay getting
in to see an experience bankruptcy attorney
is another day closer to whatever final
foreclosure deadline applies in your State.
Don't take a chance. If you house is already
in foreclosure...even if you are working
with a mortgage broker...even if the
mortgage broker sounds promising...make an
appointment to go see an experienced
bankruptcy attorney. You have nothing to
lose and everything to gain. Give yourself a
backup plan...just in case the refinance
does not come through as hoped.
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